User talk:Nat Krause/Sandbox

Disambiguating digraphs
Since the simplified transliteration system uses several digraphs, in order to represent genuine consonant clusters unambiguously, use the following rules:


 * for "s" + "h", "t" + "h", "d" + "h", etc., place ' between the two letters: "s'h", "t'h", "d'h", etc. However, for "d'" + "h", use "d'-h"
 * for "s" + ', "h" + ', "d" + ', etc., place - between the two letters: "s-'", "h-'", "d+'"
 * if ' somehow appears after t, k, d, s, d', or g, and is immediately followed by "h", then it should be written -'. "t-'h", "k-'h", "d'-'h",

Also, "-" may be used anywhere it is useful for grammatical reasons, in particular for connecting articles to nouns. If "-" is used between two instances of the same consonant if that consonant is a sun letter (for example "z-z"), then it is assumed that this is a case of assimilation in which the first instance is actually written "l".